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Three Men and a Little Lady |  | Director: Emile Ardolino Actors: Tom Selleck, Steve Guttenberg, Ted Danson, Nancy Travis, Robin Weisman Studio: Walt Disney Video Category: DVD
List Price: $14.99 Buy New: $6.38 as of 3/10/2010 16:29 MST details You Save: $8.61 (57%)
New (29) Used (10) from $5.02
Seller: pocketacesdvds Rating: 28 reviews Sales Rank: 12345
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 104 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: DISD24441D UPC: 786936118605 EAN: 0786936118605 ASIN: B00005T7I3
Theatrical Release Date: November 21, 1990 Release Date: April 2, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description It's been six years since the infant appeared on the doorstep and the three swinging bachelors from "Three Men and a Baby" are now sharing their luxurious digs with the adorable little girl and her mother Sylvia. All is not domestic bliss, however, and Mom has decided the tyke needs more conventional parenting. Her solution: marry an insufferable British theater director and move to England. Faced with the prospect of losing the mother and child forever, one of the bachelors finally realizes that he is love with Sylvia and becomes involved in a madcap scramble to prevent the marriage from taking place.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 28
Three Men and a Little Lady January 18, 2010 Arnita D. Brown (USA) Peter (Tom Selleck), Michael (Steve Guttenberg) and Jack (Ted Danson) are now dedicated "fathers" to five year old Mary (Robin Weisman). Everything is going along fine until Mary's mother, Sylvia (Nancy Travis), begins thinking she needs more stability in her life and doesn't think any of her roomates are up to the task.
Sylvia doesn't know that Peter has fallen in love with her but is hesitant to act since he feels his best friend, and Mary's biological father, Jack should step up and marry her so she accepts a marriage proposal from the directory of her play, Edward (Christopher Cazenove). The wedding is to be in England and shortly we learn that Edward plans to move Sylvia and Mary there as well. Faced with the prospect of loosing Mary from their lives Micheal and Jack convince Peter to finally ask Sylvia to marry him instead of the unlikable, but willing, Edward and the three go to great lengths to break them up.
In the end Sylvia realizes that Edward is a scoundrel and that she really likes Peter as well so we get the typical and expected happy ending with Sylvia leaving Edward at the alter to return to New York. The guys are back and are fantastic again in their roles. A great movie and to anyone who hasen't seen it.
One of my all time favorites December 17, 2009 P. Blackburn (Parsons, KS USA) This movie is one of my all time favorites...right up there with Pretty Woman. Just a clean, cute movie for all ages. Highly recommend.
Sequal May 19, 2009 Nicole Patterson Great seaqual to "Three Men and a Baby" Entire cast returns for more laughs. Watch as "baby" grows into "little lady" and see how her biological daddy and her honorary daddy's struggle with her growing up and their fight to keep her and thier family togetherT
Loved the first movie, had to get the second one! May 1, 2008 Ivy E. Casavant (Boston, MA United States) I looked at several different sites trying to find this! I absolutely love this movie!
Tom Sellick shines in this sequel January 1, 2008 Movie Mania (Southern Calfornia) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is the sequel to the smash hit Three Men and a Baby (which was a remake of the French break out hit Three Men and a Cradle).
It is now five years later. Mary, Sylvia and the boys are cohabitating in the guys apartment. But Mary wants more stability in her and Mary's life. When the director of her current Broadway smash falls for Sylvia, the happy group is about to break up. Even worse, Sylvia, Mary and Edward are moving to England.
But the boys think that "something is rotten in Denmark." They run over to England to rescue Sylvia and Mary. And it turns out that Edward is the rotter that they think he is. But now they need the proof to show Sylvia.
This is a good sequel but it not a great sequel (great story but too much irrelavant slapstick). What this movie does is give a vehicle for Tom Sellick (Peter - the architect) to shine. Tom has always been a nice amiable actor but has never had a role to breakout of his Magnum PI image. This one showed that he has more than just one character in him.
Ted Danson and Steve Guttenberg return as the "biological" Jack (the actor) and other "honorary father" Michael (the satirist) but they are just there for the ride. It is Tom's show. (Athough Ted has a great turn a the fake Vicar.)
Nancy Travis returns as Sylvia and actually is in the entire movie instead of arrive at the end like the first. And she proves that she has a great sense of time and can fake a British accent almost as good as Gwenyth.
This is a beautiful romantic comedy. Too bad they stooped to some unneccesary slapstick at times. BUT!!! I recommend this film wholehearted, and it stands on its own.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 28
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